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J I '. :: ' :' .':- 0"" :'þ:"--'" .. ,{ ' ," :':':"'h ". : .i-*1 fr"': "" . :.; _b*Æ. ....,;,:.:.:i r : :':':':':':'M':- ::..:.).i.;.... ::{{.;.:.: ,:.,:<#.#::.+i'. modern lacquer cabinet. . . gleaming, satiny finish . . . leather upholstered doors. . . tray drawers and storage space. . . useful. beautiful! \' \ Y\, ", os, , \&1- OPEN MON. & THURS. EVES. till 9 Look for the famous old red label of @ & I, " / / Fine Foods Since 1706 - NEW.Ð(EAN.HOUSI ;;;:: :; 12 MILES FBOM BOSTON - 50 TRAINS DAILY Ideal seaside and country environ- ment . . . All recreational features. Private bathing beach. Booklet. NOTE.S ON SPaR. T S New Deal , ":' '/6,c,' ':' :' 7' : 5i:" ': ìØ : B ILL V OISELLE, also known as the Gian ts' pitching staff, since he is about the only fellow they've got who has proven himself able to start and finish the same game, finally broke his string of six losses and got his fourth win last Sunday against the Cardinals. You may remember that he won his first three games of the season before falling into a serious recession. The main factor in his losing streak was the lack of sup- port by his teammates, who were backward not only with their bats but in their fielding, and let their opponents sit back and accept runs by check, wire, and money order. On Sunday, after losing the first game of a doubleheader, the Giants pulled themselves together and com- mitted only one inconsequential error behind V oiselle, helping him win 3-1. He was also helped, though, by Johnny Hopp of the Cardinal outfield, who got a single on the second pitched ball of the game but somehow persuaded himself that it might be a double and was tagged out going into second. It makes quite a. hit of difference to a pitcher to have the first batter to face him become an out instead of abase-runner. Hopp is one of a number of sprinters in the Cardinal lineup who occasionally estimate their own speed a little dreamily and are blinded by visions of long, sausagelike strings of extra bases. In Brooklyn, meanwhile, the Dodg- ers were doing themselves some good by winning two from the Cincinnati Reds. This doubleheader featured the continuation of the astonishing hitting splurge of Fred (Dixie ) Walker, a right-fielder from Alabama. He went into the doubleheader hitting .435 and came out hitting better than .440. Walker has been the Brooklyn fans' fa vorite player almost ever since he joined the team, which was in 1939. In his first three years he had trouble mak- ing the starting lineup at the beginning of the season because he was never . very good in the field, but he always did well at the plate and the fans would always clamor to see him there more often. They seemed to feel that erratic fielding was never any cause to keep a man from playing for the Dodgers, especially if he could get base hits. There is apparently more to his popularity than that, though, because it amounts to an almost feverish regard. Perhaps what did most to win him Brooklyn hearts \ from the first was the fact that he chose, of his free will, to settle in Rockville Center, which is a lot closer to Brooklyn than most Dodgers live. Walker does quite a bit of speaking at community smokers and church affairs and has taken a course from Dale Carnegie, which has no doubt helped him to w. f. and i. p. Right now, however, he doesn't need anything but that .440 batting average. T HE public's reaction to ballplayers' person- alities is often a gratifying thing. A fellow like Babe Ruth, who got a lot of home runs and was what they call colorful in the bargain, is ap- preciated by the fans, but in a recent popularity poll, in which N ew York citizens voted for their favorite athlete of all time in any sport, Mel Ott, the eminently sensible playing manager of the Giants, came out on top. He gets a certain number of home runs himself and he does it without too much rumpus (otherwise known as color) . Walker did fairly well in the poll, too, but there were too many non-Brooklyn residents votIng. I N the return fight between Joe Baksi and Lee Savold, heavyweights, last Friday night, Baksi, who is still called Baski by fifty per cent of the cus- tomers, better than evened his score with Savold by winning much more de- cisively than he was beaten the first time. He got the decision by going after Savold and pasting him with both hands instead of backing away and exchang- ing jabs, which is a basis Savold vastly prefers. Baksi has developed his left con- siderably, but another, more startling thing he has developed is the practice of leading with his right, which, as every- body knÇ>ws, is unconstitutional but which did him less harm Friday than it did Savold. -D. L. . THE HUNGRY CRITICS [Joel Bradford in the New Masses] They suffice to show that Santayana's social philosophy is anti-proletarian, anti- democratic, anti-feminist, anti-Negro, and contemptuous of colonial peoples ("Orien- tal rabble"). If you can find a more com- plete list of fascist ideas outside the pages of M ein Kampf, I shall be much surprised. If you can discern in them any resemblance to Marxism, I will eat the twenty-seven volumes on Dr. Lamont's shelf.